Unreliable Sources is renowned reporter John Simpson’s account of how the twentieth was reported in Great Britain & how what the nation thinks & feels, as well as how it identifies itself, has been shaped by the country’s “free press”. Simpson shows that, whilst Fleet Street likes to affirm its independence, it is, in fact, made quite partisan by the very power it exercises. The press have enjoyed authority over events in times of peace & war, through economic & political fluctuations & celebrity scandal, & they have at times have used their power irresponsibly: from the creation of the Daily Mail & the first stoking of anti-German sentiment in the years leading up to the First World War, to the Sun`s propping up of the Thatcher government, & beyond. In this self-analysis from one of the pillars of modern journalism some searching questions are asked, including whether the press can ever be truly free & whether we would desire it to be so.